I created my most magnificent video yesterday, based on a gorgeous poem from a loved one. I showed it to my cinema manager friend, and she said, “It’s beautiful!” I will put this video message of love in the cinema pre-show for a month once I get the tax credit or full-time work. The video is just over two minutes long, but it’s beautiful. I wondered if God had worked through me because many coincidental serendipities are happening. For instance, the music choice timed perfectly with the video I created. It is almost as if a divine force worked through me, as I didn’t deliberate its perfection. Everyone says, “It’s beautiful!” I can’t stop watching the video, as it is so spiritual. If we go toward the light, that place of love, we may suddenly find ourselves creating beauty we didn’t entirely create through our intention. It just “happens.”
And then another epiphany occurred! I decided to incorporate four or five similar two-minute clips into my documentary and make the film about unconditional love rather than higher education and unconditional love. However, higher education and unconditional love might both find a home in the documentary. When we have inspiration, the inspiration is not meant to be lost in the cosmos. It’s part of our reason for existence and bubbles up repeatedly until it overflows with blissful manifestation. It happens to all of us when we keep learning, trying, and loving unconditionally.
The great news is that the founder of the unconditional love philosophy agreed to be interviewed for my documentary and is generously providing footage! And I’m excited! My friend, who had multiple near-death experiences, provided footage, but it’s challenging to work with footage from a cell phone for a theatrical release unless the phone is set to 1920×1080 pixel resolution. Yesterday, I asserted the movie would include unconditional love and higher education themes. I want to interview a famous cardiologist who references academia in his longitudinal study of near-death experiences. So, the themes are meant to be. What themes run through our minds? If they are positive, loving, and kind, we must surrender to them, taking every measure to actualize them in this tragic but beautiful world.
Tonight, I stumbled upon Amazon advertising on Prime and TV. It should have listed the fee, so I assumed it likely costs so much that its public pricing would drive people away. But then, I thought, I can skip paying for brand recognition now. I can create the film, and they pay me. For that to happen, the film must be recognized by a film festival, aired on TV, or displayed in a theatrical release. So, I need to make the movie fantastic with an instigating incident, rising action, climax, and denouement (ending). Roadblocks we have are always divine; they steer us toward our intended destiny—the promised land on Earth. So, view our obstacles as great opportunities to grow in the direction of the sky
I like films that are strictly happy, with minimal, if any, conflict but loaded with wisdom. That’s because I don’t entirely agree with the current film paradigm. Escapism is ideally into a purely heavenly world where wisdom and love abound. So, I sit in the cinema lobby working on my film as my dear one watches the theatrical films. However, heaven has struggles, met by spiritual beings with joy, bliss, wisdom, duty, and unconditional love. Therefore, heaven is perfection—infused with joy and love. We must all train our minds to manifest joy and love in this world.
Once I gain the income, I can put the cinematic ad into a theatre for a month, spreading the beauty of unconditional love to the audience. The message may inspire someone to love others with great magnitude. Jesus and Krishna are in the video, and I want to include other religions in future projects. It may seem bizarre, but I feel a divine presence by making these projects about unconditional love. So, the more we accept unconditional love, the more we flourish into the entities we all genuinely are. We are all infinitely beautiful fractals representing the divine.